Proposal for a Gender & Sexuality Center at Hendrix College

Proposal for a Gender & Sexuality Center at Hendrix College

Proposal for a Gender & Sexuality Center at Hendrix College Overview This proposal requests institutional funding to support the continuity, coordination, and enrichment of gender and sexuality related campus initiatives. In particular, we request budget allocations to hire a Director to serve as the head of co-curricular programming, a programming budget, and funding to construct a space where students can meet and safely discuss gender and sexuality. The ‘Gender & Sexuality Center’ would provide education and structure around gender and sexuality issues, and specifically around issues of sexual assault, sexual and gender minorities, and sexual health, all of which students, staff and faculty have identified as currently lacking. The Center Director’s duties would be to: Provide strategic oversight and coordination of existing gender and sexuality initiatives such as Orientation Programming; peer-support groups (such as MyLine); student organizations such as UNITY, SAGE (formerly the Feminist Club and SEXplorations), and the Hendrix Health Squad. Develop additional campus programming related to gender and sexuality issues. Provide training (RAs, staff, faculty, students, etc.) for programs such as the ACS program “Safe Zones” and on handling gender and sexually-based violations of campus policy. Assist in shaping campus policies (such as discrimination and sexual assault policies). Offer informative/educational resources. Support students, faculty, and staff when they face gender and sexuality issues on campus. Work with the College administration to address gender and sexuality concerns among faculty and staff (such as those identified in the HERI data). Connect to the community and bring knowledge about available resources from the wider central Arkansas community onto campus. This could include coordinating transportation to and from those institutions and offering sustained civic engagement relationships with local organizations. Encourage accountability between smaller existing student groups—inspiring groups to stay active and provide support for their events. Potentially (as appropriate based on the degree of the Director) offer two courses a year in these areas (such as Intro. to Gender Studies or a section of The Engaged Citizen) and help to coordinate academic programs (potentially including Gender Studies and majors related to sexuality and queer studies). Be a resource for marketing or publicizing any future gender or sexuality related changes to the campus. Develop and manage of a safe space for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgenderi, and queer (LGBTQ) students (as UNITY has recently requested). In addition to the Director’s salary, a small programming budget would facilitate these needs. Conversations are underway about the Center’s location, ideally as an integrated complement to the MISS office in the SLTC or Counseling Services. Gender & Sexuality Center Proposal, Page 2 of 7 Gender and Sexuality at Comparable Institutions Having a Gender & Sexuality Center will both bring Hendrix in line with comparable institutions’ handling of these issues and distinguish us among our regional peers. By creating a Gender & Sexuality Center, Hendrix would move closer to the median level of programming within the Associated Colleges of the South, where at minimum gender and sexuality issues are handled more systematically under a “multicultural affairs” umbrella. Three ACS institutions (Rollins College, Washington & Lee University, and University of Richmond) have some kind of women’s, gender, and/or sexual minority Center. University of Richmond’s Common Ground, particularly its Associate Director for LGBTQ Campus Life, and programming under the Dean for Women's Education and Development, offer a full range of programming in these areas with approximately five full-time staff members dedicated to these issues. At Rollins there is a faculty member who directs the Lucy Cross Center for Women and Their Allies, with three graduate student assistants as staff. In the fall of 2011 Washington & Lee opened its GLBTQ Resource Center, and it has several people in the Counseling Center as well as an Associate Dean of Students for Diversity and Inclusion that run gender and sexuality programming. In addition, other ACS schools offer significantly improved resources and programming on gender and sexuality through staff members who have at least part of their job description focused on gender and sexuality, such as Davidson College’s Health Educator. Hendrix has an opportunity to distinguish itself among the small liberal arts colleges to which our admitted students commonly cross-apply. None of these have a women’s or LGBTQ Center or a staff person whose role it is to coordinate gender and sexuality resources and programming. However, a plurality of similarly-resourcedii small liberal arts colleges nationwide have a women’s or LGBTQ Center or a staff person whose role it is to coordinate gender and sexuality resources. Colleges without any of these generally have an actual department of women’s, gender, and/or sexuality studies whose budgets frequently cover this type of programming including a full-time staff member who coordinates programming. In our research on other institutions in the ACS, our competition schools, and similarly endowed schools, we found that institutions without a dedicated women’s or LGBTQ Centers or staff often still have active faculty-staff-student coalitions addressing sexual assault and intimate partner violence concerns that can easily be found via their website. Schools with dedicated women’s or LGBTQ Centers and staff are, in this sample, disproportionately located in the Northeast. If we intend to compete for students from this region, we should consider matching our programs to those offered by similarly resourced schools such as Dickinson, Franklin and Marshall, and Connecticut College, all of which have active gender and sexuality Centers and/or dedicated staff. Rationale and Background By institutionalizing the support that Hendrix College has sought to offer to all students, staff, and faculty regardless of their gender or sexual orientation, we will make visible much of what we do and provide significantly better service to the campus. Students have expressed a desire for increased programming and knowledge about these issues, and a Gender & Sexuality Center would consistently provide that. 2 Gender & Sexuality Center Proposal, Page 3 of 7 Across the nation, sexual assault issues have garnered significant attention, particularly with damaging cases at Pennsylvania State University, Amherst College, and University of North Carolina, Charlotte. Recognizing that nearly one in five female students are sexually victimized during their college yearsiii, Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan collaborated to better outline colleges’ obligations and students’ rights in this area. The resulting “Dear Colleague” letter from the Dept. of Education’s Office on Civil Rightsiv outlines a number of responsibilities that Hendrix has in this area beyond handling complaints; in order to be fully compliant, Hendrix will need to institutionalize more effective training and education about sexual harassment, assault, and health. Hendrix student organizations, Student Affairs, and Counseling Services have provided programming on gender and sexuality that has been well attended and offers an important foundation for the full organization, coordination, and implementation of training and education on these issues. In a survey conducted for the Fall 2012 sociological methods course, which about 1/3 of the student body responded to, many students indicated that they were unaware of campus policies relating to gender and sexual issues. Several students have also described a lack of support felt by those who experienced sexual assault or faced gender or sexuality-based discrimination or prejudice. The survey revealed that most students feel comfortable reporting cases of sexual assault to Dean Wiltgen and Counseling Services, but there is a need to expand this comfort to Residential Life and others who may be “first responders.” A Center Director could provide the training necessary to create a more supportive and prepared community. In small, insular communities, like that found at Hendrix College, reporting of gender and sexuality issues can be especially tricky and students have a false sense of security. Additionally, student organizing on these issues needs careful monitoring, and the existence of a safe space for people to discuss issues of gender and sexuality should not be dependent on student leaders who graduate within four years. Although Hendrix College believes itself to be a welcoming campus for LGBTQ students, like most college campuses norms of heterosexuality and binary gender conformity are pronouncedv. This reality means that LGBTQ people’s sense of belonging is dependent on their access to identified resources (professional staff, programs, and physical spaces) that provide freedom and strategic distance from those norms and threats that otherwise restrict their full inclusion in the community. Consequently, many colleges have advanced their commitment to supporting LGBTQ people by providing staff to oversee the coordination of LGBTQ programs, programming budgets, and physical space. By fostering an empowered LGBTQ community, a well-conceived Gender & Sexuality Center strengthens the intellectual and social aspects of the larger university community by making more

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